Core-based statistical area
A core-based statistical area (CBSA) is a U.S. geographical entity delineated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to identify closely integrated urban and rural areas for federal statistical purposes, consisting of a core urban area with adjacent counties or county equivalents tied through commuting and economic links.[1] These areas, updated periodically based on census data, encompass metropolitan statistical areas (with urban cores of 50,000 or more residents) and micropolitan statistical areas (with urban cores of 10,000 to 49,999 residents), totaling 387 metropolitan and 538 micropolitan areas as of July 2023.[1][2] CBSAs are defined using whole counties (or equivalents) containing at least one urban area of qualifying population, plus outlying areas where at least 25% of the employed population commutes to or from the core, ensuring measurement of social and economic integration.[1] The delineation process relies on decennial census data, American Community Survey commuting patterns, and population estimates, with the most recent standards published in 2021 and implemented via OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 in July 2023.[3][2] Unlike legal boundaries, CBSAs serve solely for statistical data collection, tabulation, and publication by federal agencies, including the Census Bureau, to analyze population, housing, and economic trends without influencing policy or funding allocations.[1] The concept of CBSAs evolved from earlier metropolitan designations, originating in 1949 as standard metropolitan areas (SMAs) and progressing through standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSAs) in 1959, metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) in 1983, and the current CBSA framework introduced in 2000 to include smaller micropolitan areas.[1] Standards have been revised approximately every decade—in 1958, 1971, 1975, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2020—to reflect population growth, urbanization, and improved data on commuting patterns.[1][3] As of 2024, CBSAs cover about 94.7% of the U.S. population, providing a standardized framework for comparing regional development, housing patterns, and labor market dynamics across the nation.[4]Overview
Definition
A core-based statistical area (CBSA) is a U.S. geographic entity delineated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) consisting of a core urban area with a population of at least 10,000 and adjacent communities that exhibit a high degree of social and economic integration, primarily measured through commuting patterns.[5][1] These areas serve as standardized units for collecting, tabulating, and publishing federal statistics on population, housing, and economic activity.[1] The framework emphasizes contiguity and functional ties to capture urban and rural interdependencies across the nation.[5] CBSAs consist of metropolitan statistical areas, where the core has an urbanized area of 50,000 or more population, and micropolitan statistical areas, with a core urban cluster of 10,000 to 49,999 population. Combined statistical areas aggregate adjacent CBSAs with significant employment interchange exceeding specified thresholds.[5][1] This inclusive structure replaced earlier fragmented classifications, such as primary and secondary metropolitan areas, to provide a unified system for both larger urban centers and smaller regional hubs.[5] The official terminology of "core based statistical area" was introduced by the OMB in 2000 through revised standards, aiming to unify metropolitan and nonmetropolitan delineations for consistent statistical use.[5][1] Key building blocks include urban areas or clusters identified by the U.S. Census Bureau and counties or county equivalents (such as parishes in Louisiana or independent cities in Virginia), which form the foundational geographic units except in New England where cities and towns are used.[5] This county-based approach ensures nationwide comparability in data aggregation and analysis.[1]Purpose and Usage
Core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) serve as a standardized framework for the collection, tabulation, presentation, and analysis of federal statistics related to population, employment, and economics, ensuring a nationally consistent approach to identifying regions with significant social and economic integration.[2] Established by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), these delineations provide uniform geographic units that facilitate the aggregation and comparison of data across diverse areas, drawing on decennial census information to reflect evolving urban and rural patterns.[3] Federal agencies extensively utilize CBSAs in their data practices; for instance, the U.S. Census Bureau employs them to report demographic and housing statistics, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) applies them to track employment and wage data.[1][2] OMB itself oversees the delineation process to maintain these standards, which are periodically updated—such as in the 2023 bulletin based on 2020 Census data—to support accurate policy analysis and interagency coordination.[2] The primary benefits of CBSAs include enabling consistent regional comparisons that inform urban planning, economic development, and the allocation of federal resources, such as funding formulas tied to population and economic metrics.[3] Although non-binding and intended solely for statistical purposes under laws like the MAPS Act (Pub. L. No. 117-219), CBSAs are widely adopted by states, localities, and non-federal entities for practical applications beyond federal reporting, enhancing their utility without imposing legal boundaries.[2][1]History and Evolution
Pre-2000 Developments
The origins of core-based statistical areas lie in early 20th-century efforts by the U.S. Census Bureau to classify urban populations systematically. In the 1910 Census, the Bureau introduced the concept of "urban places," defined as incorporated territories with a minimum population of 2,500 inhabitants, marking the first nationwide threshold for distinguishing urban from rural areas.[6] This classification evolved through subsequent censuses, with refinements in 1930 and 1940 that incorporated metropolitan districts around central cities of at least 50,000 residents, based primarily on population density rather than economic integration.[7] These early definitions laid the groundwork for recognizing urban cores but lacked standardized measures of regional connectivity. A significant advancement occurred in 1949 when the Bureau of the Budget—predecessor to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)—established the Standard Metropolitan Areas (SMAs) as the first uniform federal definitions for metropolitan regions. SMAs were delineated at the county level, requiring a central city with at least 50,000 population and including adjacent counties demonstrating metropolitan character (at least two-thirds nonagricultural labor force) and integration with the central county (such as at least 10,000 nonagricultural workers or high population density in contiguous areas).[7] In 1959, these were renamed Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) to underscore their role in statistical data collection and analysis.[1] By the 1960 Census, the system encompassed 212 SMSAs, facilitating consistent reporting on population, employment, and economic trends across integrated urban-rural landscapes.[8] Further refinements in 1975 updated the SMSA criteria to better account for post-World War II suburbanization, emphasizing urbanized areas of 50,000 or more as the qualifying core and applying a 15% commuting standard for adjacent counties while introducing county-based delineations in New England to align with regional data needs. These changes, part of periodic OMB revisions in 1958, 1971, 1975, and 1980, improved the capture of commuting patterns but retained a focus on larger urban centers.[1] In 1983, the term shifted to Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), dropping "standard" to simplify nomenclature while preserving the core criteria.[1] Despite these developments, pre-2000 MSAs had notable limitations, particularly the exclusion of urban areas with cores under 50,000 population, which left smaller urban clusters—often 10,000 to 49,999 residents—unclassified as metropolitan. This threshold created coverage gaps for emerging rural-urban economies, where modest population centers exhibited significant commuting and economic ties but did not meet MSA qualification, hindering comprehensive analysis of nonmetropolitan growth.[5]2000–2015 Changes
In December 2000, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued new standards that renamed metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) as core-based statistical areas (CBSAs), encompassing both metropolitan and newly introduced micropolitan statistical areas.[5] Micropolitan areas were defined around urban clusters with populations between 10,000 and 49,999, expanding coverage to smaller population centers while maintaining the focus on employment and commuting patterns.[5] This framework aimed to delineate areas containing nearly 90 percent of the U.S. population, providing a more comprehensive geographic basis for federal statistics. In June 2003, OMB applied these standards to 2000 Census data, refining criteria with a stronger emphasis on employment interchange measured by commuting flows, where at least 25 percent of employed residents in outlying counties must commute to the central core or vice versa for inclusion.[9] Urban cluster definitions from the Census Bureau were integrated to identify cores more precisely, resulting in 49 new metropolitan statistical areas and a total of 370 metropolitan and 565 micropolitan areas across 935 CBSAs.[10] These updates enhanced the delineation process by prioritizing economic integration over purely population-based thresholds.[9] The 2010 Census prompted further revisions, culminating in OMB's July 2015 bulletin that updated CBSA boundaries using new population and commuting data. This delineation added one new metropolitan area and 14 micropolitan areas, yielding totals of 388 metropolitan statistical areas, 541 micropolitan statistical areas, and 929 CBSAs overall, alongside 124 combined statistical areas grouping adjacent CBSAs with substantial employment interchange. For New England, the update shifted to county-based definitions equivalent to the existing city and town areas, facilitating consistent national application while accommodating regional governance differences.Post-2020 Updates
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) released Bulletin No. 23-01 on July 21, 2023, establishing new delineations for core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) based on the 2020 Census data and the 2020 standards for delineation.[2] These updates, effective immediately for federal statistical reporting starting with 2023 data, resulted in 935 total CBSAs, comprising 393 metropolitan statistical areas and 542 micropolitan statistical areas.[2] Compared to the 2015 delineations, this included upgrades from micropolitan to metropolitan status, such as Pinehurst-Southern Pines, NC, while some micropolitan areas were merged or reclassified, resulting in a net increase of 6 CBSAs from 929.[11][12] The 2023 delineations incorporated refined urban area boundaries derived from the 2020 Census, which identified 2,644 urban areas with updated population and density criteria to better reflect contemporary settlement patterns.[13] These adjustments affected boundary compositions across the country; for instance, in the Fifth Federal Reserve District (encompassing parts of Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, plus Washington, D.C.), 22 of 48 metropolitan areas saw changes, including county additions or removals that altered commuting patterns and employment metrics.[11] The Richmond Federal Reserve Bank noted that such shifts could impact the accuracy of regional employment data analysis, as reclassified counties may redistribute workforce statistics between urban and rural categories.[11] Full implementation across federal agencies continued into 2025. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) incorporated the new CBSA delineations into its Current Employment Statistics (CES) program with the January 2025 estimates, released in March 2025, aligning nonfarm payroll data with the updated boundaries to ensure consistency in labor market reporting.[14] Similarly, the U.S. Census Bureau released revised population totals for metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas covering 2020–2024 on September 8, 2025, reflecting the 2023 delineations and showing a total CBSA population of approximately 334.9 million, or 99.5% of the U.S. population.[4] These updates enhance the precision of economic and demographic analyses by capturing post-2020 growth trends, such as suburban expansion influencing area qualifications.[15]Delineation Criteria
Core Population Thresholds
The core of a Core-based Statistical Area (CBSA) is defined by the U.S. Census Bureau's urban areas, which are densely settled territories encompassing residential, commercial, and other non-residential land uses, identified based on population density and housing unit criteria from decennial census data.[16] Urban areas are categorized by density: high-density urban areas, which have populations of 50,000 or more and correspond to former urbanized areas, and low-density urban areas, with populations of at least 5,000 but fewer than 50,000, aligning with prior urban clusters of 2,500 to 49,999.[17] These cores serve as the population anchors for CBSAs, ensuring that delineations focus on significant urban concentrations rather than isolated rural territories.[18] For metropolitan statistical areas, the core must consist of at least one high-density urban area with a population of 50,000 or more, establishing a threshold that captures major urban centers capable of driving regional economic integration.[3] In contrast, micropolitan statistical areas require a core of one or more low-density urban areas with a total population between 10,000 and 49,999, targeting smaller but still viable urban hubs that influence surrounding counties.[2] These thresholds, set by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), remain unchanged from pre-2020 standards despite Census Bureau updates to urban area criteria, prioritizing continuity in statistical comparability.[3] Even when population thresholds are met, a qualifying urban core must demonstrate its role as an anchor through sufficient social and economic ties to adjacent areas, often assessed via commuting patterns as a secondary qualifier; without this integration, no CBSA is delineated.[2] This ensures that CBSAs reflect functional economic regions rather than arbitrary population groupings, with the core's centrality verified during OMB's periodic reviews using the latest census data.[3]Employment and Commuting Standards
The employment and commuting standards for Core-based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) focus on measuring economic integration through labor market ties between core and outlying counties, ensuring that included areas share a common employment base. An outlying county qualifies for inclusion in a CBSA if at least 25 percent of its employed residents commute to jobs located in the core counties or if at least 25 percent of the outlying county's total employment is held by residents of the core counties. These criteria highlight the core's role as the primary employment hub, with commuting flows serving as the principal indicator of regional cohesion.[3] The standards apply uniformly to both metropolitan and micropolitan CBSAs, adapting to varying scales of urban influence while maintaining consistency in assessing labor dependencies.[19] Under the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) 2020 standards, finalized in 2021 and implemented via Bulletin No. 23-01 in 2023, these determinations rely on journey-to-work data from the American Community Survey (ACS), which provides detailed estimates of commuting patterns and employment distribution across counties. The ACS data enables precise calculation of interchange measures, updating delineations to reflect contemporary economic realities. Very small counties with insufficient employment data may not be reliably included to avoid skewing results.[2][20] Merger rules further extend these standards to Combined Statistical Areas (CSAs), where adjacent CBSAs are combined if the employment interchange measure—the sum of the percentage of employed residents of the smaller area working in the larger area and the percentage of the smaller area's employment accounted for by workers residing in the larger area—exceeds 15. Adjacent CBSAs with an employment interchange measure of at least 15 but less than 25 may be considered for combination on a case-by-case basis, taking into account local opinion and other data. Such mergers promote a hierarchical view of interconnected urban systems without overriding the primary CBSA boundaries.[3]Types of Areas
Metropolitan Statistical Areas
Metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) are the largest type of core-based statistical areas (CBSAs), defined as geographic entities consisting of one or more counties or equivalent entities associated with at least one urban core of 50,000 or more inhabitants, along with adjacent communities that have a high degree of economic and social integration with that core as measured by commuting ties.[2] These areas encompass densely populated urban centers and their surrounding suburbs, reflecting major economic hubs where a significant portion of the workforce commutes to the central county or counties.[1] As of the 2023 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) delineations, there are 393 metropolitan statistical areas in the United States and Puerto Rico, covering approximately 86% of the total U.S. population, or about 294 million residents as of July 1, 2024.[21][2] Prominent examples include the New York–Newark–Jersey City, NY–NJ–PA MSA, which spans multiple states and has over 19.9 million residents, serving as the nation's largest metropolitan area with extensive financial and cultural influence.[22] In contrast, smaller MSAs like the Boise City, ID MSA, with around 846,000 residents, illustrate regional urban centers focused on growing sectors such as technology and agriculture.[23] For MSAs with populations exceeding 2.5 million, the OMB allows subdivision into metropolitan divisions to provide more granular analysis of distinct employment and commuting patterns within the larger area.[19] For instance, the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA is divided into components such as the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Glendale Metropolitan Division and the Anaheim–Santa Ana–Irvine Metropolitan Division, each capturing specific subregional dynamics.[24] These divisions enhance data usability for policy and economic studies without altering the overall MSA boundaries. MSAs may also contribute to broader combined statistical areas when multiple metros exhibit substantial inter-area commuting.[2]Micropolitan Statistical Areas
Micropolitan statistical areas represent a category of core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) designated by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for smaller urban centers with a core urban cluster population of at least 10,000 but fewer than 50,000 residents. These areas typically encompass one or more contiguous counties that are economically tied to the central urban cluster through commuting patterns, where at least 25% of the employed residents in outlying counties commute to the core or 25% of the core's employed labor force lives in surrounding counties. Often situated adjacent to rural regions, micropolitan areas function as key connectors between urban amenities and rural economies, facilitating access to services, retail, and employment for nearby nonmetropolitan populations.[2][5] These areas embody a transitional zone in the urban-rural continuum, blending modest urban development with extensive rural influences and supporting diverse local industries such as agriculture, manufacturing, and tourism. For example, the Watertown-Fort Drum area in New York illustrates a micropolitan region shaped by military presence at Fort Drum, where defense activities drive economic stability and population inflows amid surrounding rural landscapes. Similarly, the Lewiston, ID-WA area demonstrates cross-state dynamics in a rural-adjacent setting, serving as a hub for agriculture and trade along the Idaho-Washington border. Such characteristics highlight how micropolitan areas contribute to regional cohesion without the density of larger urban centers.[1][25] As of the 2023 OMB delineations based on the 2020 Census, there are 542 micropolitan statistical areas across the United States and Puerto Rico, accommodating approximately 26.6 million residents—or about 8% of the national population—in 2024 estimates. These areas play a vital role in capturing population growth outside major metros, with many experiencing steady increases due to affordability, natural amenities, and proximity to larger economies. Growth trends show that several micropolitan areas evolve into metropolitan status during decennial reviews when their core populations exceed 50,000, reflecting ongoing urbanization patterns; for instance, reclassifications occur if commuting thresholds and urban cluster sizes meet updated criteria. Additionally, some may merge into combined statistical areas with adjacent metros to better represent broader employment interchanges.[2][4][26]Combined Statistical Areas
Combined statistical areas (CSAs) represent aggregations of two or more adjacent core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) that demonstrate substantial employment interchanges, serving as a framework for analyzing larger regional labor markets and economic interactions beyond individual metropolitan or micropolitan boundaries.[27] These areas capture broader social and economic linkages, such as commuting for work, wholesaling, and recreational activities, among contiguous CBSAs, including combinations of metropolitan statistical areas and micropolitan statistical areas.[2] Unlike standalone CBSAs, CSAs are not considered official delineations for federal program funding but are used for statistical reporting and regional planning to reflect integrated economic regions.[1] The primary criterion for forming a CSA is a significant employment interchange rate, defined as at least 15% of employed residents from the smaller component CBSA commuting to jobs in the larger one, or a reciprocal measure exceeding 15% when the smaller area has more out-commuters.[27] This threshold indicates strong labor market integration across the combined areas. CSAs must consist of contiguous CBSAs and cannot overlap with other CSAs, ensuring mutually exclusive geographic coverage.[2] While there is no minimum population threshold specifically for CSAs as a whole, they are built from qualifying CBSAs that meet their own urban core population standards, resulting in CSAs that often encompass substantial total populations.[1] As of the 2023 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) delineations, there are 184 CSAs across the United States and Puerto Rico, comprising 582 component CBSAs and frequently spanning multiple states to delineate extensive regional economies.[2] Notable examples include the Boston–Worcester–Providence CSA, which aggregates several metropolitan and micropolitan areas across Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and parts of New Hampshire and Connecticut to represent a major New England mega-region with integrated housing and employment markets.[28] Similarly, the Washington–Baltimore–Arlington CSA combines core areas in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia, highlighting cross-jurisdictional commuting patterns in one of the nation's largest labor pools.[28] These CSAs facilitate the study of regional dynamics, such as economic spillovers and infrastructure needs, without altering the definitions of their underlying components.[1]Special Considerations
New England Exceptions
In New England, the six states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont have historically employed New England City and Town Areas (NECTAs) for delineating core-based statistical areas (CBSAs), reflecting the region's unique administrative structure where counties serve primarily as minor civil divisions with limited governmental functions, unlike the more robust county-based systems elsewhere in the United States.[29] NECTAs, introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in 2003 alongside the initial CBSA framework, aggregated cities and towns based on commuting patterns to urban cores, providing an alternative to county delineations that better aligned with local governance and data collection practices in these states.[2] The 2015 OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 marked a significant shift by revising CBSA delineations to emphasize county-based boundaries for greater national consistency, extending these standards more consistently to New England in areas such as the Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH Metropolitan Statistical Area (encompassing Norfolk, Plymouth, and Suffolk counties in Massachusetts, among others) and the Providence-Warwick, RI-MA Metropolitan Statistical Area (including Bristol County in Massachusetts and Providence County in Rhode Island).[29] However, NECTAs were retained as a parallel system for Census Bureau data tabulation, allowing flexibility in regions where town-level boundaries more accurately captured economic integration, such as the Springfield, MA Metropolitan Statistical Area (Hampden and Hampshire counties).[29] This dual approach addressed the challenges of New England's fragmented county roles while advancing standardization. Under the 2020 OMB standards, implemented in the July 2023 delineations via Bulletin No. 23-01, NECTA delineations were fully discontinued to eliminate redundancies and align entirely with county-based CBSAs nationwide, using 2020 Census data for updates.[2] For instance, the Portland-South Portland, ME Metropolitan Statistical Area (code 38860) now relies solely on county boundaries, incorporating Cumberland, Sagadahoc, and York counties, without a separate NECTA equivalent, though it forms part of the broader Portland-Lewiston-South Portland, ME Combined Statistical Area.[2] The U.S. Census Bureau ceased producing NECTA estimates beginning with the 2023 American Community Survey, citing low federal usage and the benefits of uniform county-based data for statistical purposes.[30] This transition impacts the six New England states by streamlining federal data comparability for economic analysis and policy, while the prior dual systems had supported localized planning by accommodating town-centric commuting patterns; ongoing county-based CBSAs now provide a single, consistent framework for applications like labor market assessments in areas such as Burlington-South Burlington, VT.[31]Territories and Non-Contiguous Areas
In U.S. territories and non-contiguous states, core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) are delineated using the same 2020 standards as the contiguous states, with local administrative divisions serving as equivalents to counties for defining cores and commuting patterns. These areas adapt to unique geographic and administrative structures, such as isolated islands or sparse boroughs, while relying on decennial census and American Community Survey data to measure employment and population thresholds.[2][1] Puerto Rico features 10 CBSAs, comprising six metropolitan statistical areas and four micropolitan statistical areas, defined using 78 municipios as county equivalents to identify urban cores with at least 10,000 residents and adjacent areas linked by commuting flows of 25% or more. Examples include the San Juan-Bayamón-Caguas Metropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 41980), which encompasses the island's largest urban core, and the Mayagüez Micropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 34060). These delineations, updated in July 2023 based on the 2020 Census, reflect economic integration without crossing territorial boundaries.[2] Alaska's CBSAs number four—two metropolitan and two micropolitan—accommodating the state's boroughs, municipalities, and extensive unorganized areas, where census subareas substitute for counties in boundary definitions. The Anchorage Metropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 11260) serves as the primary example, incorporating the Municipality of Anchorage and surrounding areas with strong commuting ties, while the Fairbanks North Star Borough Micropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 21820) highlights smaller hubs in remote regions. Delineations emphasize local employment centers amid vast unpopulated expanses, as revised in the 2023 OMB bulletin using 2020 Census commuting data.[2] Hawaii delineates four CBSAs—two metropolitan and two micropolitan—using its five counties, with island geography limiting inter-island commuting considerations to intraisland patterns that rarely exceed the 25% threshold for linkage. The Urban Honolulu Metropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 46520), centered on Oahu, and the Kahului-Wailuku-Lahaina Metropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 27950) on Maui represent the larger urban clusters, while the Hilo Micropolitan Statistical Area (CBSA code 26100) on Hawaii Island exemplifies smaller cores facing isolation challenges. These areas, finalized in 2023, apply standard population and employment criteria adapted to insular contexts.[2]Applications and Data
Integration with Census Data
The U.S. Census Bureau plays a central role in the delineation of Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) by providing foundational geographic and demographic data, particularly through its decennial urban area classifications. Every ten years, following the Decennial Census, the Census Bureau identifies and maps urban areas—densely settled territories with at least 2,000 housing units or 5,000 persons—as the nuclei for CBSAs. These urban areas, updated based on the latest census data, serve as the core population thresholds required for CBSA qualification, with metropolitan statistical areas needing an urban area of at least 50,000 population and micropolitan areas requiring one between 10,000 and 49,999.[3][1] The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) relies on these Census Bureau urban delineations to establish CBSA boundaries, incorporating additional commuting patterns to define central and outlying counties. Post-census, such as after the 2020 Decennial Census, the Census Bureau first delineates urban areas using detailed population and housing data; OMB then reviews and finalizes CBSA boundaries within approximately three years, as seen with the July 2023 update. This alignment ensures CBSAs reflect current demographic realities while maintaining consistency with Census geographic frameworks. Commuting data from the American Community Survey (ACS), conducted annually by the Census Bureau, further refines these boundaries by measuring workforce flows between counties, with five-year ACS estimates used for OMB's periodic reviews.[3][1][2] Census data products integrate seamlessly with CBSAs for statistical tabulations and analysis. The Decennial Census provides comprehensive baseline population counts and geographic compositions tabulated by CBSA, enabling detailed demographic profiles. The ACS offers annual updates on key indicators, such as commuting patterns and employment, which support ongoing CBSA maintenance and mid-decade refinements by OMB. These products ensure that federal, state, and local agencies can access reliable, standardized data for policy and research.[1][3] To facilitate data integration, the Census Bureau maintains tools like delineation files, which list the county components of each CBSA along with codes and titles, and crosswalk files that link CBSAs to Federal Information Processing Series (FIPS) codes for counties and other geographic units. These resources allow users to match Census data products to CBSA boundaries precisely, supporting applications in economic analysis and urban planning. For instance, the 2023 delineation files, based on 2020 Census data, provide updated crosswalks for all 925 CBSAs.[32][33]Population and Economic Statistics
Core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) encompass a significant portion of the U.S. population, with metropolitan statistical areas alone accounting for over 85% of the total population according to 2023 Census Bureau estimates. This concentration reflects ongoing urbanization trends, where annual population changes in CBSAs are driven by components such as natural increase (births minus deaths) and net domestic and international migration. For instance, between 2020 and 2023, metropolitan CBSAs experienced net domestic migration losses of approximately 1 million people, amid declines in natural increase due to aging demographics. As of 2024, U.S. metro areas reached 293.9 million residents.[34] Population estimates from the 2020 Census to 2024 highlight the scale of major CBSAs, with the New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA metropolitan area remaining the largest at around 19.5 million residents in 2023, down slightly from 19.6 million in 2020 due to pandemic-related outflows. Other top areas include the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA area with 12.8 million and the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI area with 9.3 million in 2023. Micropolitan areas, while smaller, have shown growth in regions like the Sun Belt. Economically, CBSAs are key units for tracking employment through the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Current Employment Statistics (CES) program, which provides monthly nonfarm payroll data by CBSA as of 2025 updates. In 2024, the total nonfarm employment across all metropolitan CBSAs reached approximately 137 million jobs, representing about 87% of U.S. total employment. The San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA CBSA exemplifies an economic hub, with 2024 CES data showing approximately 2.4 million employed in sectors like professional and business services, contributing to its status as a tech-driven powerhouse. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) allocates gross domestic product (GDP) to CBSAs, revealing economic disparities and growth patterns; in 2023, metropolitan CBSAs generated about 88% of U.S. GDP, totaling approximately $24 trillion. For example, the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA CBSA led in per capita GDP at around $180,000 in 2023, fueled by innovation industries, while broader trends indicate increasing urban concentration, with post-2020 shifts showing accelerated growth in Sun Belt micropolitan areas like those in Texas and Florida due to remote work and affordability.| CBSA Example | 2023 Population (millions) | 2023 GDP (billions) | Key Economic Sector |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA | 19.5 | 2,100 | Finance and Professional Services |
| San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA | 4.6 | 600 | Technology and Innovation |
| Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX | 8.1 | 700 | Logistics and Energy |